Grenfell to be dismantled, bereaved families told

Grenfell Tower, a high rise block covered in white material Image source, Reuters
Image caption,

The charred shell of Grenfell Tower was covered with protective white wrapping soon after the 2017 fire

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The government has decided to dismantle Grenfell Tower, Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner told a meeting with bereaved relatives and survivors.

Seventy two people died when the tower block in west London caught fire in June 2017.

The decision follows several years of debate over the future of the 24-storey tower, with some hoping it would remain in place as a lasting reminder of the tragedy and others wanting it replaced with a new memorial.

A formal announcement by the government is expected to be made on Friday.

Kimia Zabihyan, representing the group Grenfell Next of Kin which acts for some of the bereaved families, told the BBC she attended the meeting with Rayner where she said the tower would be deconstructed down to the ground level.

She described the meeting as "charged", but said Rayner appeared to have come along with the "best of intentions".

"The deputy prime minister was very clear that she has taken this decision very seriously, that it is a serious responsibility and that it is a very sensitive decision to make, but it is one that she felt she had to make," said Ms Zabihyan, adding that Rayner said she made the decision based on what engineers had recommended.

The government has previously been warned the structure may be unsafe due to the extent of the fire damage.

'Deeply personal matter'

Ms Zabihyan said she agreed with the decision, but that many people were very unhappy.

She said at the meeting, one person told Rayner that "no-one cares about this more than me, because I had just bits of bone to bury of my mother so that building means a lot to me. That is where her soul is, where her ashes are. It's in that building."

A spokesperson for Grenfell United, a group which also represents bereaved families and who was also at the meeting, said "no-one" supported Rayner's decision to "demolish the tower" and that people "had been ignored".

"She refused to confirm how many bereaved and survivors had been spoken to in the recent, short four week consultation," the spokesperson said in a statement.

"Today's meeting showed just how upset bereaved and survivors are about not having their views heard or considered in this decision.

"Ignoring the voices of bereaved on the future of our loved one's gravesite is disgraceful and unforgivable".

Following the meeting, a government spokesperson said: "The priority for the deputy prime minister is to meet with and write to the bereaved, survivors and the immediate community to let them know her decision on the future of the Grenfell Tower.

"This is a deeply personal matter for all those affected, and the deputy prime minister is committed to keeping their voice at the heart of this."

Memorial wall outside the towerImage source, PA Media
Image caption,

A memorial wall has been created near the tower, serving as a shrine to the 72 people killed in the fire

The fire on 14 June 2017 was originally caused by a faulty fridge in a fourth floor flat and quickly spread around the block because it was covered in highly flammable cladding.

A public inquiry concluded in September the disaster was the result of numerous government failures, and failure of the construction industry to act on the dangers of flammable materials on high-rise buildings.

The west London tower block was covered in combustible cladding because of the "systematic dishonesty" of firms who made and sold it, inquiry chairman Sir Martin Moore-Bick said.

Many bereaved families have called for criminal action to be brought against some of those implicated in the inquiry but police and prosecutors have said that no decision would be made on potential charges until the end of 2026.

In a 2023 report, the Grenfell Tower Memorial Commission commission set out a series of recommendations for a "sacred space", designed to be a "peaceful place for remembering and reflecting".

It said the space should include a garden, monument and dedicated space for the private expression of grief and mourning for the families who lost loved ones.

A shortlist of five potential design teams was announced last month, and a winning design team is set to be selected this summer.

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